You are using a freeware writer but you have created the pdfs in adobe acrobat right. so you must have created a text field which you dynamically populate. If you go to acrobate writer (we have version 6.0) you can go to properties>add action and add an action to open a web link. So when you dynamically populate it and someone clicks on it, it opens up a browser.

When you install the program, it attaches itself as a printer. When you find a document you want to convert to a PDF, you go File - Print - select the PDF995 printer, as if you're going to print it, a box then appears saying where do you want to save the PDF to, you select the location and it produces a PDF.

Think I might have to get the Adobe Writer though if I want people to click on links.

Most of the sites are being standardized with W3C Web Standards. W3C provides lot of web standard services to the web. They have the web specification, process and documentation for all the web standards. You can apply HTML, CSS and Accessibility st…

I found this questions asking how to do this in many different forums, so I will describe here how to implement a solution using PHP and AJAX.
The logical flow for the problem should be:
Write an event handler for the first drop down box to get …

The viewer will receive an overview of the basics of CSS showing inline styles.
In the head tags set up your style tags:
(CODE)
Reference the nav tag and set your properties.: (CODE)
Set the reference for the UL element and styles for it to ensu…